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- From: brock@ucsub.Colorado.EDU (Steve Brock)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books.reviews,rec.arts.books,alt.cyberpunk,sci.cognitive,alt.drugs.culture,alt.cyberpunk.movement
- Subject: Review of Chaos and Cyberculture by Timothy Leary
- Date: 16 Jan 1995 22:54:19 GMT
- Approved: brock@colorado.edu
- Message-ID: <3feter$auj@CUBoulder.Colorado.EDU>
-
- CHAOS AND CYBERCULTURE by Timothy Leary. Ronin Publishing, Box
- 1035, Berkeley, CA 94701, (510) 540-6278, FAX: (510) 548-7326.
- Illustrated (over 100 black-and-white), bibliography, lists of
- resources. 292 pp., $19.95 paper. 0-917171-77-1
-
- Reviewed by Steve Brock
-
- "The PC is the LSD of the Nineties."
- -- Timothy Leary
-
- "Every time you think he's senile, he's not."
- -- Winona Ryder, Leary's god-daughter,
- in "Life" magazine
-
- This compilation of Leary essays, interviews, and profiles
- from the 1980s (widely printed in a variety of mediums and
- distributed through several Internet newsgroups), is a user-
- friendly, if not particularly focused, tour of several stops on
- Leary's ever-evolving cultural agenda. This incarnation is
- dedicated to "high-tech pagans and digital philosophers."
- In "Chaos," Leary examines digital technology's effects on
- chaos theory with the help of William Gibson, David Byrne, William
- S. Burroughs, and others, with a good measure of new-age
- metaphysics on the side.
- As humans further develop their psychological capabilities,
- Leary says, they become ever-closer to "forming neural-electronic
- symbiotic linkups with solid-state computers." These linkups,
- Leary believes, will cause us to operate at higher levels of
- intelligence - "mapping and colonizing the next frontier - one's
- own brain," and "protecting [it] from invasion and exploitation
- from without."
- "Chaos" doesn't try to be a significant contribution to the
- study of chaos theory and digital technology. The book is
- whimsical, jargon-ridden, undisciplined and frequently off-topic
- (such as his chapter on war). But it's typical Leary, who, with
- his team of guerilla computer artists that liven up each page,
- dares us to "just say know," and to have a good time as we create
- our mutual digital realities. Grade: B.
-
-
-